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Re: [TCML] Tesla Coil Computer Interference
Hi Brandon
When I ran my first coil - first light - I had the secondary, the strike ring, and the terry filter RF grounded to an 8' rod pounded into the earth.
The Variac, of course, was grounded to the wall-socket 3rd prong. The line filter is grounded to the outlet 3rd prong. I had also connected the NST cases to the 3rd prong wall socket ground. (In fact, I've been running that way ever since.)
But on my first run I had some difficulties with tuning - And several items on that same circuit suffered some sort of destructive forces. Most notably, I have a light fixture powered by a constant current LED driver I built myself. The output current adjusting resistor, which was a 2W deal, just simply "popped" wide open, in every respect - electrical and physical.
That device was NOT grounded in any way. So whatever had killed it was running along either neutral or hot, because it's too far away physically from the coil to have suffered any RF or EMP or whatever you want to call the coil's electric field.
I guess what I'm saying is that even with filters and safety gaps and ground rods and whatever I still had currents running through the house power.
Lucky for me there's very little on that garage circuit to worry about (now that my LED driver is blown).
I did fix the LED driver and am running it on the same circuit again. Call me daring or a fool - it hasn't had any issues since I've been running properly tuned.
Cheers,
Joe
On Jul 24, 2010, at 5:46 PM, Brandon Hendershot wrote:
> Hi Gary,
>
> It's never done this before... Only when I attached the dummy load. Of course, I've never had the primary coil in place either... Shouldn't the Terry Filter prevent this kind of stuff?
> And "midpoint ground", does that mean the ground connection on the case is wired to the midpoint of the secondary windings, Or am I mistaken?
> And the computer is alive and well. I assume that beeping was a signifier of an internal GFI being tripped. Everything else on the circuit is fine...
> Oh! Could it be that adding the coil on the wiring circuit was drawing too much power (a lot of power strips in use anyways) caused it? That seems a bit illogical though...
> Thanks,
> Brandon
>
> On Jul 24, 2010, at 4:45 PM, Gary Lau <glau1024@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> I just noticed - you said your NST case is connected to the Variac green
>> wire (mains safety ground). This is wrong, IMO. The NST case should be
>> connected only to the RF ground, although there is some controversy here.
>> But this still doesn't explain what zapped your PC.
>>
>> Regards, Gary Lau
>> MA, USA
>>
>> On Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 7:36 PM, Gary Lau <glau1024@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>> Oooo - not a good sign! I would have guessed that using the dummy load
>>> would have been a more benign case than normal operation, since there's no
>>> RF oscillations without a primary. I'm at a loss to suggest a fault
>>> mechanism. Any possibility the primary circuit or dummy load could have
>>> made contact with the mains? Is the PC still dead?
>>>
>>> Regards, Gary Lau
>>> MA, USA
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 5:59 PM, Brandon Hendershot <
>>> brandonhendershot@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi All,
>>>> Ran my coil the other day to test out that primary coil simulator I just
>>>> recently made. It worked great! (Thanks again Gary) But when I shut it down
>>>> and pulled my ear muffs off, I noticed my computer was making this loud
>>>> solid "BEEEEEEEEEP" noise and wouldn't respond to keyboard or mouse input.
>>>> What concerns me, is that the coil wasn't grounded at all except NST case
>>>> to Variac to Green Wire Ground... Could it have interfered just through the
>>>> mains power wires? My computer's only the next outlet down in the same
>>>> circuit...
>>>> All input appreciated here,
>>>> Brandon
>>>>
>>>> Note: no safety gaps fired, nor were there any abnormalities... (arcing,
>>>> smoke, etc.)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
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